The West Shoke. VOL. 6 No. 3. !U ImhmI Pnliltunor, IMM........I, 8t, Portland, Oregon, March, 1880. rr Annum, I Ninglp itoiIm YONCAI.I.A VALLEY. Yoncalla Village contains two stoics This beautiful lley is situated j ; nd a postofficc, and three grain ware- the northern portion of Douglas county, ho,,scs- & surrounded by a large is about eight miles long from north to aml wealthy community, who arc noted south, and from three to five miles wide for their &enmI tatrtJIgpnM and enter- from east to west, it derives its name Pnsc' nd PbWjf 00 farming com- from the Yoncalla tribe of Indians who ,mm"v in Oregon, of the same number occupied it previous to its settlement of Pn, will equal then, in wealth by the whites. A few of the tribe still fr ca"'"- live In the vicinitv. havimr settled down 1 lu,.,!.rs' wll,U s WMlsting, of Rob- J (MI Mill IHlll'K I nu n i.,. I I Tef. 1848. 1 1 f . A i I on iana 01 tneir own, aim aie goou r,.icS M.u., ;,, his vnjej farmers. They arc well civilized, send their chil dren to school, and arc anxious to secure for them a good education. One of the tribe, well known amongst the settlers as old Halo, died alnut a year and a half ago. From his appearance, he must have been near a hundred years old, and he claimed that to be about his age. His wife, who was about the same age, died about a year before the old man. They were respected in the community, and ev ery one treated them kindly. Their children still live near, have quite large families, vote regu larly at election, and arc esteemed by the Mttlera, The village of Yoncalla is on the O. ft C. R. R., five and a half miles from Drain, fourteen miles by railroad from Oakland, and thirty-three miles from Roseburg. No place in Oregon en joys a more pleasant or more healthy climate, the thermometer Robert Cowan was killed by the fall ranging from thirty to fifty degrees, on '"K ,,f a trcc which he was cutting for an average, in the winter, and from r:lil"- IIc a large family, most of seventy to eighty-five in the summer, whom still reside in the valley. Thos. rarely going above or below those fig- Cowan died recently, at an advanced ures. The soil is generally of the first- nBc unmarried. Mr. Jeffries now lives class, and in past years has produced in BptOO county. In i.S.o, Jesse Ap immense crops of grain and grass, but plegate and his brother Charles came owing to long continued, ow--. farm-! to the vallcv from Pdtk couutv, and ing, the fertility of the soil is greatly thencxt ' I(imUny tnother ,,r(lthcr ....:,. ,.-,1 ,:n ... i.icame. Hon. Jesse Apple-gate still 1 ... .1 formerly did until it gets it Lindsay lives in the extreme southern part ot Oregon. Messrs. Long, Rich ard Smith, Robert Smith, V. II. VViU son and A. T. Ambrose, came about the same time that the Applcgntcs did. Nearly all the first settlers, who have not died, are still residents of the valley, Yoncalla village seems to he at a standstill nt present, but with so large and wealthy a farming country to sus tain it, the town is sure to grow to a place of some importance. There is a splendid opening here for a steam (louring mill. Saw mills are conveniently lo cated near, and good lum ber can be had at ten dol lars per thousand. VONCAI.I.A VA1.I.KY Ork;on. Ives here; Charles died last year, and A NEW OREGON FLOWER. The l'olemonium is one of a genus of plants of the order Polemoniicen, to which belongs the well known Phlox, and is the representative of the order. The species of which I write is by far the prettiest of the whole genus. So far as I know, it grows only in a few places along the South Umpqua river, Oregon. I have never found this species described in any work on botany that has come under my notice. It grows in clumps of about a doen or two stalks about eighteen inches high, each stalk In uring a cluster of I n 11 n e I - shaped flower, Which, when first blown, are of 11 light cream-color, with orange centre, chang ing gradually to a pink, or rose-color, so that there will lie a half-dozen different shades on one stalk. The plant is perennial; (rows on sandy soil in its wild state, dying down after blooming. When culti vated it remains green the year round, and the pretty pinnate leaves are highly ornamental. Hut it is bOtH the plant in cultivation that I wish to speak. I have grown it for a number of years, and find it of jeasy culture, growing anywhere it it